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Merchants and Entrepreneurs in Imperial Russia (Paperback, New edition)
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Merchants and Entrepreneurs in Imperial Russia (Paperback, New edition)
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This book is the first general history of Russian "businessmen"
from Peter the Great to the Revolution of 1917. It is also a
challenging new interpretation of the nature of social change in
tsarist Russia.
Alfred Rieber seeks to explain how Russia developed a capitalist
economy and launched a major industrialization without giving rise
to a mature bourgeoisie. His analysis concentrates on the
deep-seated social divisions that prevented the political unity of
the Russian middle classes even when their vital interests were
threatened by powerful bureaucrats and a workers' revolution. He
concludes that the fate of the Russian merchants and industrialists
was part of a larger social fragmentation in Russia on the eve of
World War I.
Rieber argues that the merchantry was throughout its history the
most unstable and politically passive group in Russian society.
Periodically swamped by an influx of peasants, the merchants were
never able to free themselves from state tutelage or their own
traditional values. Surrounded by ethnic rivals, the Great Russian
merchantry adopted the mentality of a besieged camp. The real
innovators in Russia's industrialization were social deviants--Old
Believer peasants, declasse nobles, and non-Russian peoples on the
periphery of the empire. But even these "entrepreneurial groups"
failed to provide the leadership for a strong middle class because
they were deeply marked by competing regional and ethnic
attachments.
In Rieber's analysis the Russian bureaucracy shares much of the
blame for the absence of a cohesive class structure in Russia. It
feared and opposed the emergence of a bourgeoisie, and it was
deeply split over the question of industrialization. Rieber
concludes that the bureaucracy helped to maintain the legal
distinctions within Russian society that contributed to its
fragmentation.
This work touches on almost every aspect of imperial Russian
society--its political and legal institutions, social movements,
intellectual currents, and economic development. Rieber has drawn
on a wide range of sources including Soviet archives, merchant
memoirs, contemporary journals, pamphlets and newspapers, and the
proceedings and reports of many specialized societies and
organizations.
Originally published in 1991.
A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the
latest in digital technology to make available again books from our
distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These
editions are published unaltered from the original, and are
presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both
historical and cultural value.
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